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Part II of Class. Composition of the Atmosphere. Atmosphere : envelope of air surrounding the earth and bound to the earth by the earth’s gravitational attraction. Extends from the surface into space with decreasing density with height. No real top.
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Composition of the Atmosphere Atmosphere: envelope of air surrounding the earth and bound to the earth by the earth’s gravitational attraction. Extends from the surface into space with decreasing density with height. No real top.
The atmosphere is really very shallow compared to the size of the planet • Just a thin veneer • ¾ of the atmosphere by mass is in the lowest 33,000 ft, roughly 10 km
Atmospheric Constituents • Gases
CO2: a greenhouse gas (very effective absorber and emitter in the infrared). O3: good in stratosphere (protects from UV), bad near the surface (corrosive to lungs and more) SO2: emitted by volcanoes. Atmospheric particles and acid rain NO2: produced by combustion. Acid rain and smog.
Variable gases • Water vapor (~0 to 4%). Critically important! • Clouds and precipitation • Important way to move energy around • Major greenhouse gas! • Methane (CH4): major greenhouse gas
Non-Gas Constituents • Hydrometeors -rain clouds, hail • Particulates and aerosols • Aerosol is a liquid or solid dispersed in a gas, usually air • Particulates can be • Inorganic- soil, smoke, dirt, sea salt, volcanic dust, surface acid aerosol • Organic- seeds, spores, pollen, bacteria
Why are particles in the air important? • Act as condensation and freezing nuclei! • Water likes to condense on or freeze on to particles • Can absorb or scatter radiation • Reduce visibility • Can scatter solar radiation to space: cool planet • Can impact human health. • Can irritate lungs, initiate asthma, heart disease
The Origin of the Earth’s Atmosphere Still Many Uncertainties ….
About 4.5 billion years ago, Earth formed out of nebula of gases and dust that were to become the solar system Small objects--called planetoids-- accreted or combined together to build larger objects…such as planets
The First Atmosphere • The early atmosphere would have been similar to the Sun--mainly hydrogen and helium, but this atmosphere was lost quickly for at least two reasons: • (1) The gravity of the modest size earth was not strong enough to prevent such light gases from escaping to space. Particularly since the early earth was hot! • (2) It appears that around 30 million years after the earth’s formation, it was struck by a large object…the size of Mars. The result: the origin of the moon and loss of earth’s early H, He atmosphere.
Earth as Hell • The surface of the earth during this period was extremely hot with numerous volcanoes • The earth was under near constant bombardment by objects of varying sizes • Slowly, the earth started to cool down and the second atmosphere began to form.
Earth’s Second Atmosphere • A new atmosphere was established by the outgasing of volcanoes…the mixture of gases was probably similar to those of today’s volcanoes: • H20 vapor (roughly 80%) • CO2 (roughly 10%) • N2 (few percent) • Small amounts of CO, HCL, HS (Hydrogen Sulfide), SO2, CH4 (Methane), Ammonia (NH3), and other trace gases.
Earth’s Second Atmosphere • Virtually no oxygen in that second atmosphere. • Thus, no ozone layer, so ultraviolet radiation flooded the earth’s surface. • With a huge influx of water vapor and the cooling of the planet, clouds and earth’s oceans formed. • At that time the sun was about 30% weaker than today…why didn’t the earth freeze over? • The apparent reason: so much CO2 so there was a very strong greenhouse effect.
The Rise of Oxygen and the Third Atmosphere • In the first two billion years of the planet’s evolution, the atmosphere acquired a small amount of oxygen, probably by the splitting of water (H20) molecules by solar radiation. • The evidence of this oxygen is suggested by minor rust in some early rocks. • The oxygen also led to the establishment of an ozone layer that reduced UV radiation at the surface. • With the rise of photosynthetic bacteria (cyanobacteria) and early plants, oxygen levels began to rise rapidly as did indications of rust in rocks • Between 2.5 billion years ago to about 500 bya, 02 rose to near current levels.
The Third Atmosphere • While O2 was increasing, CO2 decreased due to several reasons: • (1) In photosynthesis CO2 is used to produce organic matter, some of which is lost to the system (e.g., drops to the bottom of the ocean or is buried) • (2) chemical weathering, which removes CO2
Chemical Weathering • H20 + CO2 --> H2CO3 carbonic acid • CaSiO3 + H2CO3 --> CaCO3 + SiO2 + H20 Silicate Rock Carbonate • At first this happened without life, but the process was sped up tremendously by living organisms • Marine organisms would incorporate carbonate into their shells, which would fall to the ocean bottom when they died---thus, removing them from the system for a long time. • The bottom line…CO2 was being removed from the system.
More Changes • Sulfur compounds were taken out of the atmosphere as acid rain and were deposited on the ground as sulfates. • N2 gas increased slowly but progressively since it was relatively inert. • Current composition of the atmosphere was established approximately a billion years ago.
A Problem • With lower CO2 levels the earth became more susceptable to ice ages when solar radiation decreases due to orbital variations, • It appears that around 750-550 million years ago the earth cooled down and became nearly entirely glaciated. • Note: one can get into a feedback with snow reflecting solar radiation, producing cooler temperatures and more snow, leading to less radiation, etc.
How Did We Get UnFrozen? • Volcanoes were still putting CO2 into the atmosphere • Weathering was greatly reduced…since little liquid water. • So CO2 increased until the greenhouse effect was so large the earth warmed up. • Once warming started it would have happened very rapidly.
The Last 500 million Years • The climate has not been constant, with warm periods interrupted by ice ages. • Much of the variability forced by changing solar radiation due to periodic changes in the earth’s orbital characteristics and tilt (Milankovitch cycles) and major volcanic eruptions (putting out massive CO2 that caused warming.
More Snowball Earths? • Less chance now • Sun is getting progressively stronger • Human’s can now stop it (increasing greenhouse gases)
Mercury No Atmosphere
96% CO2 Sulfuric acid clouds Surface temp: 900F (470 C) Surface pressure: 90 times greater than earty Venus
Venus Beneath The Clouds From Radar
Surface Pressure: ~6 hPa Mostly (~96%)CO2, small amounts of H20 vapor CO2 and H20 polar ice Lots of dust Average T: -80F but warmer near equator in summer (70F) Mars
Martian Clouds
Atmosphere Mainly hydrogen (90%) and helium Jupiter No solid surface
75 H2 and 25% HE Saturn